Thursday, May 23, 2013

After loads of planning, researching through blogs, paying
for plane tickets in cash, and frazzled excitement over the past two months,
Katie and I are finally embarking on our major trekking trip—we’re going to
PERU!

Casa nueva!
When Katie and Taylor came over to make chocolate chip banana pancakes
and watch Game of Thrones.

I had zero plans of going to Machu Picchu during my time on
the South American continent and honestly had no clue whatsoever of what I
wanted to do after leaving Chilean Patagonia. When you accomplish your number
one life goal with flying colors by your twenty-first birthday, other plans
just don’t come to mind. I lived in
Torres del Paine, I can die happy now, right? Well, turns out, this has opened
up my horizons for what I could possibly want to tackle next with complete
freedom of mind and newfound confidence in my ability to go for almost anything,
really, as long as I give it my best.

Buying plane tickets in cash a few months ago...

My good friends Sarah and Kate in Patagonia raved about the
Salkantay trek they had done in December, so months later I decided to look
into it as a possibility for the intercambio student break in May. If two weathered trekkers can say a trail was the best they had ever hiked after just completing the Paine circuit,
you know it must be pretty spectacular. The trail is a permit-free alternative
to the Inca Trail at higher altitude and lesser crowds in our small post-wet
and pre-tourist season window of late May. Problem? Flights to Peru were well
over a thousand US dollars and completely not an option. After a few weeks of
tossing ideas around with Katie, we realized that we could get a cheaper option
in the LAN office in Mendoza, use the blue market US dollar to Argentine peso
exchange rate (~8.3:1USD rather than 5:1USD. Best thing ever.), and manage to
barter the round-trip ticket down to US$370 including tax. We bought the
tickets in cash at the office within eight hours of finding that price. Boom.
We were officially going to Peru!
So now we are set to be in the country for ten days: time spent acclimating in
Cusco, five days on the Salkantay trail, roll our way out of the backcountry at
the base of Machu Picchu in Aguas Calientes, take a train to Ollantaytambo for
more Incan ruins, then back onto an overnight plane for our South American
home. We both are so excited but I still haven’t quite realized that this is
happening: I think I’ll realize it once the high altitude headache sets in, and
hopefully will not end up with a severe case of AMS. Nevertheless, you never
know until you try, so here goes!

Fairly to-scale map found on the internet. Looking forward to finding a proper topo in Cusco.

The Salkantay trek, although boasted as one of National
Geographic’s 25 Best Treks in the World, is not a very well-documented
undertaking at all. Thanks to a head start of information that Sarah and Kate
emailed to me, Katie and I have pulled together a pretty solid itinerary that
is 70% for our own information and 30% to inform our parents of our whereabouts
while being completely out of cell phone or phone card range and only having
internet in rare hostels. It may appear as though their daughter is simply
running amok in the mountains of the world, but I can assure you that grabbing
my pack and heading out the door is not the case. It is not easy for anyone
involved, but my parents happen to be remarkably wonderful for trusting each of
their kids to try our limits in each of our own ways. It is things like this
sort of planning that make it possible. Granted, they are more proponents for
week-long, incommunicado high-altitude treks than the jumping-out-of-airplanes
sort of personal trials I am guilty of, but nevertheless are the most
supportive parents I can imagine.

May our itinerary help as a head start to whoever may have
interest in hiking the Salkantay Trek in future, and serve as an explanation
for my next few days. This is unedited from Katie and my Google Doc of joint planning,
just minus the rather interesting South American grocery list and commentary:
thoughts on that for another time. Enjoy and I will report back, free from
altitude and infamous Peruvian bacterial sickness, by early June!

Game faces.

Much mochilera love,
Em

P.S.- In other news, I am wishing from afar for the happiest
of birthdays to the best Dad around! Pops has a rather significant birthday
here on the 26th that he and Mom will be spending in the glorious
land of Minnesota to celebrate my cousin’s graduation from St. Olaf College—so
may congratulations also be had to Andy on finishing undergrad!

P.P.S.- Katie and I happen to be in the same place in the
Game of Thrones series, so we’ll be spending our evenings on the trail reading
aloud from the third book, but otherwise: if you have recommendations for card
games that can be explained over email or Skype, let me know!

Thursday, May 16, 2013

I MOVED. Hallelujah. This is probably going to only be a big
deal to my Baldwin family and fellow IFSA estudiantes de intercambio, but it is
indeed a really big deal. It’s pretty rare for a study abroad student to actually speak up about not being comfortable in a host family situation, even
if it is encouraged. After months of thinking that things would get better if I
powered through or that I should just deal with not being fed
regularly, I finally decided I needed a change.Therefore, my last few weeks
have been a terribly slow, in classic Argentine fashion, process of changing
families. I am now on the other side of the city in the sixth district (“La
Sexta”) where most IFSA students live and have regrettably left what was easily
the most convenient host family location of anyone. I do miss living next
to Plaza Italia and easy, safe walking distance from anywhere. Nevertheless, I
have been in my new house for a whopping fifteen hours at this point and by two
hours in I was THRILLED. Seriously, I have not been quite so bubbly-excited
about something since I can remember. I got a good-night hug, for goodness’ sake! Hugs are the best.

Floor above the cellar at Bodega Trapiche

My new host mom is Celia, easily one of the friendliest
Argentines I have met. She is essentially my middle school English teacher,
Mrs. Velarde, who was probably one of my favorite English teachers I’ve ever
had. Upon first meeting her last week, she told me her theory on host students
is to treat them how she would want her two now-grown sons to be treated if
they ran off to some foreign land to live with a stranger—at that point I knew
she was in this for the right reasons. She happens to love cooking and
immediately showed me how to work the stove to gave me free reign if I wanted
to cook, plus she avidly paints and makes mosaics, my favorite art venture, in
her free time. The only drawback is that now I am in a much less safe
neighborhood than before: my neighboring IFSA student, Matt, was robbed at
gunpoint a block away from our houses early on. Nevertheless, I feel being
aware at night with the added price of using only taxis after dark is worth
actually feeling happy and at home.

Bodega Carinae

Bodega Carinae

Celia announced
quite quickly how much she loves talking, which is great. I’m a super talkative person in English as anyone knows, but
Spanish buries my personality somewhere deep under fear of failure and lack of
vocabulary. Just being around Celia gets me to talk—I’m not afraid of asking
her questions or completely destroying a verb conjugation attempt or even just
actively participating in conversation, all things that I was afraid of with my
previous host mom. There is this reckless level of Spanish-speaking where I
simultaneously don’t care if I butcher the language and actually end up being
really good at the language without meaning to be that I have reached once
before. In my last two weeks in Torres del Paine, I so strongly wanted to be
friends with the people I spent all my time with that I just busted through
whatever doubts I had and spoke. Lo
and behold, my personality resurfaced and I was no longer that awkward quiet
gringa!

Super chill Beer Garden in Maipú

So that is happening again and I’m super pumped. I might emerge from study
abroad and actually be decently proud of my language abilities, since I’ve been
pretty disappointed in my lack of fluency in the last few weeks. Nevertheless, these
weeks have been great and I apologize for completely neglecting le blog, oh
wonderful friends and family who graciously continue to read my blathering.
I’ve been caught up in all sorts of odd events such as school or bumbling about
with friends and even working on post-graduate applications and various Wheaton
endeavors that I am so outrageously excited about.

Malbec the alpaca, resident of Bodega Trapiche

About two weeks ago, I successfully got around to doing one
of my top Mendoza bucket-list items: a day biking between bodegas in Maipú, the
rich wine region directly southeast of Mendoza. A handful of us rounded up to take
a micro (city bus) out to the bodegas at the bright and early hour of 9 am (the
earliest I’ve woken up for anything in weeks. That’s embarrassing). We rented
some pretty hilariously iffy cruisers, tested out and rightly decided against
the tandem bike option, and set out along the roads to stop in whichever
bodegas our hearts desired. We first visited Trapiche, a bodega you may be able
to find in the United States. It is a gigantic importer with an equally
gigantic facility, and the grand volume of production they support is quite
impressive. From there we moved on to try something less-Mendoza-style and
stopped at a beer garden for lunch. The entire menu was one type of pizza,
empanadas, and three home brews, and all of the above were surprisingly
fantastic. It reminded me so much of a combination between Erratic Rock hostel
in Puerto Natales, Chile, and this campsite that my family stayed at in
Naivasha, Kenya: I could have lived in this place, it was so comfortable. But
alas, we dragged ourselves away from the comfy outdoor couches and back onto
the bikes to head to Carinae, a tiny French-owned boutique bodega

Beer Garden lunch of pizza mendocina

far on the
outskirts of the Maipu region. My parents and I briefly stopped here at the end
of their visit, but unfortunately missed their open hours. They had been so
friendly to us that I made a point to return and it was so worth it. We had the entire place to ourselves and were able to
take our time during the tour and the tasting: we are all new to this, and our
host graciously taught us all about Malbecs and general wine tasting techniques
in both English and Castellano. It was so welcoming and comfortable, and a
wonderful contrast to the high-production Bodega Trapiche. Overall, biking
among the vineyards with the snow-capped Andes lining the horizon on a sunny
autumn day was purely divine and I am so happy I woke up for it.

We had sushi!! And hummus on a separate occasion

The rest of my days have been a strange but tranquila mezcla
of Mendocino living: finding ourselves spectators at a super high-class polo
tournament (yes, polo), testing as many heladarías artesanales as I can
possibly find, officially accepting my fate as a liberal arts student by
learning how and becoming addicted to knitting (albeit whilst abroad), and
prepping for my upcoming backpacking trek in T-minus eight days with banana chocolate
chip cookies out the wazoo. I was supposed to have my first exam since December
three weeks ago, but learned on exam day that the date had changed with only
the two gringas of the class completely missing the memo. The following week, I
arrived, again ready to take the test, to find the building completely barred
off due to no running water. Evidently this
week I will finally take the test, but at this point my studying attempts are
half-hearted.

As for my upcoming trip, I absolutely cannot begin to
explain how excited I am for that and I will be writing about it next week
before I leave on Friday. In other news, many congratulations to all the
wonderful graduates enjoying festivities this or next week—it has been a
pleasure to know each of you and you will all do great things!

Pages

About Me

I am studying computer science at Wheaton College in Norton, Massachusetts. Any time I find away from coding and math is spent wandering in the great outdoors, preferably without any puma encounters.
I spent a semester abroad in South America and chronicled my thoughts and adventures in the Voyage of the Baldwin blog. I volunteered on a trail crew in Torres del Paine National Park in Chilean Patagonia, before moving to Mendoza, Argentina, for a few months of Spanish, arts, wine, and sunshine.
May this blog provide as a reference for my travels and treks to those interested in trying out a new trail themselves, and help to fill friends and family in, at least for in between phone calls and visits.